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Query: UMLS:C0018801 (
heart failure
)
72,216
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Captopril was used in 20 infants aged less than 1 year with
heart failure
secondary to defects with predominantly a left to right shunt that was poorly controlled with digoxin and diuretics. Total daily dose of captopril ranged from 0.88 to 2.5 mg/kg (mean 1.3 mg/kg) in three divided doses. Improvement in the control of
heart failure
was seen mainly as an increase in the rate of weight gain from a mean of 48 g/week before treatment to 102 g/week on treatment and a decrease in the mean respiratory rate from 68 breaths/minute to 60 breaths/minute. Side effects were seen in four patients--two with asymptomatic mild hypotension, one with renal insufficiency which improved with a reduction in dose, and one with severe
oliguria
progressing to renal failure. Significant changes in plasma electrolyte concentration did not occur except in the infant who developed acute renal failure.
...
PMID:Captopril in heart failure secondary to a left to right shunt. 328 79
Six children with refractory
heart failure
were treated by continuous arteriovenous haemofiltration. The cause of the failure was postoperative fluid overload or low cardiac output with anuria or
oliguria
. This produced a mean (2 SD) negative fluid balance of 1.4 (0.6) ml/kg/h and reduced mean (2 SD) body weight from 4.7 (2.2) to 4.2 (2.3) kg over a period of 57.5 (31.1) hours. Central venous pressure fell significantly from 13.7 (3.1) to 7.7 (0.7) mm Hg while the mean (2 SD) arterial pressure increased significantly from 44.6 (5.5) to 52.6 (5.1) mm Hg. In three infants urine production resumed when normal blood volume had been achieved. The other three infants needed further haemofiltration because of prolonged renal failure. All but one was weaned from artificial ventilation and catecholamine treatment. No adverse haemodynamic effects were noted. One child need operation for a femoral artery thrombosis after 12 days of continuous arteriovenous haemofiltration.
...
PMID:Continuous arteriovenous haemofiltration in children with postoperative cardiac failure. 367 36
The hemodynamic effects of lumbar epidural anesthesia (LEA) were evaluated in 11 patients with severe preeclampsia. All patients were receiving magnesium sulfate upon entry into the study. Hemodynamic measurements were obtained before and after LEA, at delivery, and 2 hr postpartum. Lumbar epidural anesthesia significantly reduced mean arterial pressure from 121.4 mm Hg to 97.7 mm Hg, without altering cardiac index, pulmonary vascular resistance, central venous pressure (CVP), or pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (PCWP). There was a slight but statistically insignificant decrease in systemic vascular resistance from 1078 to 900.7 dynes X sec X cm-5. Cardiac index and left ventricular stroke work index were elevated in these patients, suggesting hyperdynamic left ventricular function. There was poor correlation between PCWP and CVP in several patients. We conclude that LEA may be used safely in severe preeclamptic patients and that pulmonary arterial catheters may help guide appropriate therapy in preeclamptic patients with
cardiac failure
or
oliguria
refractory to modest fluid challenges.
...
PMID:Severe preeclampsia: hemodynamic effects of lumbar epidural anesthesia. 394 Apr 67
Sixteen infants, 2 to 35 days of age, had acute renal failure, a diagnosis based on serum creatinine concentrations greater than 1.5 mg/dL for at least 24 hours. Eight infants were oliguric (urine flow less than 1.0 mL/kg/h) whereas the remainder were nonoliguric. To determine clinical parameters useful in prognosis, urine flow rate, duration of anuria, peak serum creatinine, urea (BUN) concentration, and nuclide uptake by scintigraphy were correlated with recovery. Nine infants had acute renal failure secondary to perinatal asphyxia, three had acute renal failure as a result of congenital cardiovascular disease, and four had major renal anomalies. Four oliguric patients died: three of renal failure and one of
heart failure
. All nonoliguric infants survived with mean follow-up serum creatinine concentration of 0.8 +/- 0.5 (SD) mg/dL whereas that of oliguric survivors was 0.6 +/- 0.3 mg/dL. Peak serum creatinine concentration did not differ between those patients who were dying and those recovering. All infants who were dying remained anuric at least four days and revealed no renal uptake of nuclide. Eleven survivors were anuric three days or less, and renal perfusion was detectable by scintigraphy in each case. However, the remaining survivor (with bilateral renal vein thrombosis) recovered after 15 days of anuria despite nonvisualization of kidneys by scintigraphy. In neonates with ischemic acute renal failure, lack of
oliguria
and the presence of identifiable renal uptake of nuclide suggest a favorable prognosis.
...
PMID:Prognostic factors in neonatal acute renal failure. 646 25
This study presents an analysis of the influence of the site of rupture of abdominal aortic aneurysms on the postoperative survival rate. A series of 226 patients, who underwent emergency operations for ruptured aneurysms, is examined. The three most important methods of rupture are: (1) Retroperitoneal rupture: this type is associated with a very high mortality (52.8% in our experience), which reaches almost 75% when the posterior parietal peritoneum tears and massive intraperitoneal bleeding occurs. This mortality is related to the amount of blood loss, hypovolemic shock, the number of transfused blood units and, especially, to increasing renal insufficiency. (2) Rupture into the inferior vena cava: in this event the mortality rate it less severe (38.4% in our experience) and it is mostly related to the occurrence of an high output
cardiac failure
, as well as to
oliguria
or anuria following renal venous hypertension. (3) Enteric rupture: this is, in our experience, the most uncommon event. It carries a high mortality rate (50%). The copious bleeding, which is unrestricted in hollow organs, explains the dangerous hypovolemic shock, while massive blood reabsorption from the enteric tract leads to a renal insufficiency.
...
PMID:Influence of the rupture site of abdominal aortic aneurysms with regard to postoperative survival rate. 650 97
Acute renal failure (ARF) was observed in 6 patients under indomethacin treatment. Before receiving the drug 3 patients had normal, and the other 3 slightly elevated plasma creatinine levels. All patients were also treated with diuretics. ARF developed within the first 48 hours of therapy. Four patients had clear-cut
oliguria
. The renal disorders proved completely and rapidly reversible after treatment was discontinued, except in one female patient who had to undergo peritoneal dialysis for 12 days and in whom moderate aggravation of the pre-existing renal insufficiency persisted on follow up. The ARF was attributed to a sudden fall in renal blood flow due to the inhibitory effect of indomethacin on prostaglandin synthetase. This complication occurs exclusively in patients with renal hypoperfusion secondary to hypovolaemia, with
cardiac insufficiency
or with intrarenal vascular lesions. Sodium depletion induced by previous or concomitant diuretic treatment increases the risks. The possibility of ARF warrants careful monitoring of urinary output and renal function at the onset of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory therapy in patients with altered or precarious haemodynamics.
...
PMID:[Acute renal failure during indomethacin treatment. 6 cases (author's transl)]. 678 Dec 8
Data are reported on 142 infants less than 3 months old who left the operating room alive after an open intracardiac operation during the 13 years from January 1967 to July 1980. The probability of postoperative in-hospital cardiac death for acute postoperative
heart failure
(the most common mode of death in these infants) was found by multivariate logistic analysis to be significantly related only to the strength of pedal pulses, the pedal skin temperature and the cardiac index in the first 5 postoperative hours. When cardiac index was not analyzed and cold cardioplegic myocardial preservation methods used, only pedal pulses and pedal skin temperature were significant predictors of hospital death. Blood pressure and heart rate were not related to this mode of hospital death.
Oliguria
occurred in 23 percent of patients; it was related primarily to inadequate cardiac performance and increased the probability of hospital death. Treatment protocols are derived based on these facts.
...
PMID:Intracardiac surgery in infants under age 3 months: predictors of postoperative in-hospital cardiac death. 727 Apr 58
An aortocaval fistula was encountered in one of our 121 cases of abdominal aortic aneurysms. Signs of high output
cardiac failure
, increased central venous pressure and
oliguria
disappeared during the operation. The signs are discussed and compared with data from the literature.
...
PMID:Aortocaval fistula as a complication of ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm. 746 93
The hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS) is the end result of a variety of etiologic agents that can induce endothelial cell injury and thrombotic microangiopathy (TMA) mostly within the kidney. The typical, post-diarrheal verocytotoxin associated HUS (D + HUS) is the major cause of acute renal failure in children worldwide. In the course of HUS treatment, fluid overload is usually the result of overhydration in the context of
oliguria
or anuria which cause edema, hypertension, worsening of neurologic signs and
cardiac failure
. Appropriate and timely use of dialysis has dramatically reduced complications of renal failure and extra-renal complications are now the main causes of mortality and morbidity in D + HUS. The reasons for treatment by infusion of fresh frozen plasma and/or plasmapheresis for D + HUS are theoretical and their therapeutic effects are inconclusive. We believe that plasma administration for regular D + HUS has no value and is potentially harmful. Until new strategies become available in clinical practice, the general consensus for the moment is that careful supportive management with patience is still the most appropriate form of D + HUS therapy.
...
PMID:[Advances in the treatment of hemolytic uremic syndrome (HUS)]. 908 86
The application of intermittent renal replacement therapies in critically ill patients with both acute renal failure and
heart failure
is often associated with circulatory instability and refractory hypotension. We have evaluated the efficacy and safety of a continuous technique (continuous veno-venous hemofiltration-CVVH) in 7 patients (1 male, 6 females, mean age 77 +/- 4 years) referred to our intermediate care unit for
oliguria
, acute renal failure and NYHA functional class IV, CVVH was performed by a peristaltic pump with blood flow at 200 ml/min, controlled ultrafiltration production rate (25 ml/min), minute to minute microprocessor controlled fluid balance system, biocompatible filters, low-dose prostacyclin for the extracorporeal circuit maintenance. Non invasive evaluation of cardiac function was performed by Doppler echocardiography. A total of 673 hours of CVVH were performed, with a mean extracorporeal circuit duration of 96 +/- 26 hours/patient (range 15-134). Daily urea clearance was 32 +/- 21. A mean body weight decrease of 10% was obtained (body weight before-CVVH 64.5 +/- 6 kg vs end-CVVH 58.5 +/- 5 kg, p < 0.01, paired data Student's test) without any hemodynamic worsening; metabolic control was adequate (urea before-CVVH 251 +/- 73 mg% vs end-CVVH 117 +/- 18 mg%, p < 0.01). Hospital survival was 42% (3/7 patients). In patients with acute renal failure and severe
heart failure
, CVVH allows an easy control of both fluid balance and acid-base equilibrium, along with the maintenance of acceptable hemodynamic stability.
...
PMID:[Continuous veno-venous hemofiltration in acute renal insufficiency and heart failure]. 931 10
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